pinto - Curate a custom repository of Perl modules
pinto --root=REPOSITORY_ROOT [global options] COMMAND [command options] [args]
pinto is a tool for creating and managing a custom CPAN-like
repository of Perl modules. The purpose of such a repository is to provide a
stable, curated stack of dependencies from which you can reliably build,
test, and deploy your application using the standard Perl tool chain. pinto
provides various commands for gathering and managing distribution
dependencies within the repository, so that you can control precisely which
dependencies go into your application.
pinto supports several commands that perform various operations on
your repository, or report information about your repository. To get a
listing of all the available commands:
$> pinto commands
Each command has its own options and arguments. To get a brief
summary:
$> pinto help COMMAND
To see the complete manual for a command:
$> pinto manual COMMAND
The following options are available for all commands.
- --root DIRECTORY |
URL
- -r DIRECTORY | URL
- Specifies the root of your repository. This is mandatory for (almost) all
commands unless you've set the
"PINTO_REPOSITORY_ROOT" environment
variable to point to your repository. The root can be a path to a local
directory, or the URL where a pintod server is listening.
- --no-color
- --no-colour
- Do not colorize command output.
- --password
PASS
- -p PASS
- The password to use for server authentication. This is only relevant if
using a remote repository. If the PASS is "-" then you will be
prompted for a password.
- --quiet
- -q
- Report only fatal errors. This option silently overrides the
"--verbose" options. Also suppresses the
progress meter.
Note: The progress meter is always suppressed when using a
remote repository. This will hopefully be fixed a future release.
- --username
NAME
- -u NAME
- The username to user for server authentication. This is only relevant if
using a remote repository. Defaults to your current login.
- --verbose
- -v
- Display more diagnostic messages. This switch can be repeated multiple
times for greater effect. Diagnostic messages are always sent to
STDERR.
Each repository has a configuration file that lives inside the
repostiory at .pinto/config/pinto.ini. This file is generated for you
with default values when you create the repository. You can influence the
initial value for some of the properties when you run the init command.
Thereafter, you can change these properties by editing the configuraiton
file directly.
The following configuration parameters are supported:
- sources = URL1 [URL2
URL3 ...]
- This is a space-delimited list of the URLs for the upstream repositories
that this repository will pull archives from. These can point to CPAN
mirrors, minicpan mirrors, or stacks within other Pinto repositories.
Pinto will search the source repositories in the order they are listed
here. The default value is "http://cpan.perl.org
http://backpan.perl.org".
- target_perl_version
= X.X.X
- Sets the default "target_perl_version"
property for all new stacks. Otherwise, all new stacks will target the
version of perl that you first used to create the repository. You can
always configure the target perl for each stack independently by using the
props command.
BEWARE: The above configuration properties are global --
they affect every stack in the repository. They also have a major affect on
how the repository behaves. For these reasons, it is generally unwise to
change these parameters once you have established the repository and filled
it with content. If you do change them, be sure and notify your team about
it. Each stack also has some stack-specific configuration properties. Those
can be shown or set using the props command.
The following environment variables influence the behavior of
pinto. If you have installed pinto as a stand-alone application as described
in Pinto::Manual::Installing, then the best place to set these variables is
in your ~/.pintorc file.
- "PINTO_REPOSITORY_ROOT"
- Sets the default path or URL of the pinto repository, if the
"--root" is not specified. The
"--root" is required for almost all
commands. So if you usually only work with one repository, then setting
this can save you quite a bit of typing.
- "PINTO_EDITOR"
- Sets the path to editor application that will be used to compose log
messages. If not set, defaults to
"VISUAL" or
"EDITOR". If none of those are set,
either "nano",
"pico", or
"vi" will be used (in that order).
- "PINTO_NO_COLOR"
- "PINTO_NO_COLOUR"
- If set to a true value, suppresses color in all command output.
- "PINTO_COLORS"
- "PINTO_COLOURS"
- A comma-separated list of exactly three color names. Any name supported by
Term::ANSIColor is allowed. These will be the colors that pinto uses to
colorize various output. For example:
PINTO_COLORS='red, light blue, green on_white'
Listing too many or too few colors will cause an exception, as
will using an invalid color name.
- "PINTO_USERNAME"
- Sets the default username when
"--username" is not specified. This is
only used for authentication with a pintod server. Defaults to your
current shell username.
- "PINTO_AUTHOR_ID"
- Sets the default author identity when the
"--author" option is not specified
(currently, only used by the add command). Defaults to your current shell
username. By PAUSE convention, all author id's are forced to
uppercase.
- "PINTO_PAGER"
- Sets the path to the pager application that will be used to paginate
output from each command. Defaults to
"PAGER". If none of these are set, then
no pager is used.
- "PINTO_DEBUG"
- If set to 1, pinto will emit more diagnostic messages to STDERR. If set to
2, pinto will emit even more diagnostic messages.
pintod to allow remote access to your Pinto repository.
Pinto::Manual for general information on using Pinto.
Stratopan <http://stratopan.com> for hosting your Pinto
repository in the cloud.
Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <jeff@stratopan.com>
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Jeffrey Ryan
Thalhammer.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.